📍Book Review📍

 📍Book Review📍


Book:- Scapeghostism 

Author:-@deshsubba 


“A fierce philosophical wake-up call that dares to put our entire intellectual heritage on trial.”


Scapeghostism is less a conventional book and more a philosophical intervention. It introduces the concept of “scapeghostism”—a theory suggesting that human knowledge systems (philosophy, religion, politics, academia) are built on acts of scapegoating, where individuals, groups, or even ideas are unfairly burdened or blamed.


Subba takes aim at towering intellectual figures like Friedrich Nietzsche, Karl Marx, and Charles Darwin, not to dismiss them outright but to question how their ideas may have contributed to new forms of intellectual “victimization.”


The book challenges readers to rethink history, knowledge, and truth itself—suggesting that what we accept as intellectual progress may be deeply flawed or even unjust.


Subba argues that scapegoating is not just social or political—it is embedded in knowledge production itself. From religion to science, no domain is immune.


The book questions the authority of scholars, historians, and philosophers, suggesting that blind trust in them leads to distorted realities.


Subba’s style is intense, abstract, and unapologetically complex. This is not a linear or easy read—it feels like stepping into a storm of ideas.


Why You Should Read This Book:-


📍If you enjoy challenging philosophy that questions everything you’ve learned.


📍To explore a completely new theoretical framework (scapeghostism).


📍If you're interested in rewriting history and knowledge systems.


📍To engage with bold, unconventional thinking that breaks academic norms.


📍To examine how marginalized voices are shaped by dominant narratives.


Scapeghostism is not a comfortable read—but it’s not meant to be. It’s a disruptive, unsettling, and deeply ambitious work that challenges the foundations of intellectual thought. While it may not convince everyone, it succeeds in doing something rarer: forcing readers to rethink what they believe is true.


A powerful but demanding philosophical experiment - best suited for readers who are ready to wrestle with ideas rather than simply absorb them.

Must read♥️♥️


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